Maj.Nick Danger said:I've seen this material in military hats, and it is described in my 1940 Bailey's catalog as, "Fish Skin". Seems to be some sort of breathable material,... but actual fish skin??? Sounds unlikely, but then again,...[huh]
Does anyone know just exactly what this stuff was?
Maj.Nick Danger said:So it really was the actual skin from some sort of fish?
Garrett said:If you wanna paint and insist on wearin a hat USE A BALL CAP! No need to ruin a fedora.
jamespowers said:I have heard it described also as oilskin but I always thought it was just texturized plastic. [huh]
Garrett said:If you wanna paint and insist on wearin a hat USE A BALL CAP! No need to ruin a fedora.
jimmy the lid said:Based upon the use of this term in a vintage Mallory ad, I think that this material might have been referred to as "oil silk."
Cheers,
JtL
jamespowers said:Oil silk would be a good term. Kind of makes more sense than plastic too.
Woodfluter said:However, all this leads to the question I'd like to pose: Why are liners sewn or glued in at all? I found that they can be removed for warmer weather, then re-inserted when cooler weather arrives, tucked in under the sweatband, and they stay in place very nicely. Unless you deliberately pulled on one, or turned the sweatband back to inspect it, you'd never know they weren't attached. In other words, they seem to stay in place without problems sans stitches or glue guns.
carter said:Leslie N. Daniels patented Oil Silk as a "Hat Protector" in February of 1920. I have been unable to locate further information on Daniels.
@{patent:1330582,
title = "Hat-protector",
number = "1330582",
author = "Daniels, Leslie N.",
year = "1920",
month = "February",
Country = "United States"
"http://www.freepatentsonline.com/1330582.html"
This is the earliest Patent at the US Patent Office with this name.
There are 93 other patents tied to Hat Protector.
Maj.Nick Danger said:I've seen this material in military hats, and it is described in my 1940 Bailey's catalog as, "Fish Skin". Seems to be some sort of breathable material,... but actual fish skin??? Sounds unlikely, but then again,...[huh]
Does anyone know just exactly what this stuff was?